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More people outside of the Church are learning about the Church’s welfare system after Lucky Severson, an Emmy Award-winning TV reporter, highlighted the system in a report on the PBS TV show Religion & Ethics Newsweekly.

The special included interviews with a handful of people who are involved in the welfare system, from the top director to a Relief Society president and ward member.

“There may be other charities that are larger or more helpful, but the welfare tradition within The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints must be one of the world’s best,” states the description of the article on pbs.org.

The television special focused on how the program supplies food, clothes, and care to people who are in need, no matter their religion. During the report, the welfare system’s managing director, Steve Peterson, calls the idea of caring for those who are in need a “scriptural mandate.”

“There are no strings attached to this,” said Brother Peterson in the report. “It’s not because they’re members or because we feel some obligation because of their beliefs that we help them. This is aid that we give to anybody just because they’re in need, and we feel that it’s the right thing to do.”

Also included in the report was an interview with Richard Humphreys, who is the manager of the bishops’ storehouse, as well as other interviews with service missionaries, a serving bishop, a Relief Society president, and a woman who has received assistance through the welfare system.

Other details included in the report highlighted the 115 bishops’ storehouses throughout the U.S., as well as other parts of the welfare system.